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North American Aviation B-21/23 Dragon
Conceptually similar
B-23 Dragon on Tarmac
B-23 Dragon on Tarmac
B-23 Dragon on Ground
B-23 Dragon - First Flight Takeoff
B-23 Dragon Flight Line
B-23 Dragon - Ship Number 2 with New Nose
B-23 Dragon on the Day of its First Flight
Mock Up of B-23 Dragon Tail Turret
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TBD-1 Devastator on the Ground
TBD-1 Devastator on Tarmac
Similar tones
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B-23 Dragon on Ground
Douglas B-23 Dragon (1939-1940): The Douglas B-23 Dragon, a twin-engine medium bomber, was a proposed improvement on the B-18A Bolo. The B-23 was a direct descendant of the DC-3, through the development of the B-18 and B-18A, and actually used some parts that were interchangeable with the DC-3. The B-23 was the first U.S. bomber to feature a tail gunner. Built in 1939 and 1940, B-23s were used for coastal patrol on the Pacific Coast during the early months of World War II. Later several were modified by the Army Air Force to UC-67 Utility Transports by removal of the bomb bays, nose and tail armament and the installation of passenger seats. In 1941, the B-23 was caught in the changeover to four-engine bomber philosophy and it was not any reflection on the quality of the airplane itself that more were not built. The Army Air Force declared most Dragons surplus after World War II. After 1945, the B-23’s high performance and dependability made them attractive as executive transports and led to their description as “one of the most deluxe, high-speed, short-field, long-range executive transport aircraft” of the post-war period.
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Unique identifier
BI21574
Boeing ID
sm16212
Type
Image
Size
5998px × 4398px 25MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1930s
airplanes
bombers
clear skies
copy space
day
exteriors
full body views
ground shots
head on views
historic production status
military
military livery
monoplanes
nobody
photos
propeller planes
sunshine
tarmac
unpainted
vignetting
vintage / retro
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